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Black History Makers

Dr. Quintard Taylor, pioneering historian and BlackPast.org founder, dies at 77

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Dr. Quintard Taylor, pioneering historian and BlackPast.org founder, dies at 77

Dr. Quintard Taylor, the distinguished historian of African American history and founder of BlackPast.org, has died at 77.

Born in Brownsville, Tennessee, Taylor built a towering academic legacy documenting Black life across the United States, especially in the American West. His scholarship includes the Pulitzer Prize–nominated Search for the Racial Frontier: African Americans in the American West, 1528–1990 and The Forging of a Black Community: A History of Seattle’s Central District, 1870 through the Civil Rights Era.

Across decades in academia, he mentored generations of students and broadened the historical record with meticulous research and accessible storytelling.

In 2007, Taylor launched BlackPast.org, which he envisioned as a freely accessible, rigorously sourced repository for Black history. The site has reached more than 64 million users, becoming one of the web’s largest encyclopedic resources on the global African diaspora.

His contributions earned major honors, including the Pacific Northwest Historians Guild’s Lifetime Achievement Award and the Carter G. Woodson Memorial Award from the National Education Association and the Association for the Study of African American Life and History.

Current BlackPast leadership praised Taylor’s life’s work and pledged to continue his mission. “His work will live on in the minds of those who have learned from him and will continue to light the way for those who seek a better understanding of the world,” said Douglas Bender, BlackPast’s board president. “It has been a joy…and it is not done.”

Dr. Quin’Nita Cobbins-Modica, Taylor’s mentee and BlackPast’s vice president, called his legacy “immeasurable,” adding: “I…am committed to honoring this sacred trust of carrying forward Dr. Taylor’s vision to ensure that Black history remains accessible for generations to come.”

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